Champigny was appointed as Intendant of New France by
Louis XIV on April 24, 1686. He embarked from
La Rochelle with his pregnant wife and two of his sons on July 22. He took with him a bronze copy of the
Bust of Louis XIV by
Gian Lorenzo Bernini which he installed in the market square of the lower town of
Quebec, site of present-day
Place Royale, so that the inhabitants of New France would know what their sovereign looked like. Jacques-René de Brisay, Marquis de Denonville,
Governor General of New France, was pleased that Champigny had been chosen for the position. Champigny's predecessor,
Jacques de Meulles, had frequently quarrelled with Denonville as well as with the previous governor
Antoine Lefèbvre de La Barre. Champigny helped Devonville organize the 1687 military campaign against the
Seneca. The Seneca threatened the French hold on the ''
Pays d'en Haut'' and in recent years had become extremely aggressive. During King William's War, Champigny was critical of Frontenac's leadership. He strongly disagreed with Frontenac's decision to rebuild Fort Frontenac which Denonville had ordered destroyed in 1689. Champigny considered the fort "useless" and believed that maintaining a garrison there was a waste of resources. Frontenac was reluctant to invade
Iroquois territory, but under pressure from Champigny and the minister he launched an invasion of
Onondaga and Oneida territory in the summer of 1696. ==Return to France and Death==